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‘All I really needed to know, I learned from a farmer’

Tammy Wellbrock, Hays Chamber of Commerce Executive Director
Tammy Wellbrock, Hays Chamber of Commerce Executive Director

Through his most famous essay, Robert Fulghum attributed his time in kindergarten for teaching him all of the important life skills he needed to be a successful adult. While he made some valid points, I respectfully have to disagree.

You see, I grew up on a farm, in a rural agriculturally dependent community, with friends who also lived on farms. Our fathers were not the only farmers, so were our uncles, grandparents, and, in some cases, our siblings.

As the Hays Area Chamber of Commerce prepares for our annual Farmer’s Appreciation Dinner on Oct. 16, I can’t help but reflect on my childhood and how so much of my actions, attitudes, ethics and beliefs were molded by those farming influences.

Thus, I believe, all I really needed to know, I learned from a farmer.

For instance, some things I learned:

• It isn’t just good manners to wave at all passing vehicles; it is downright rude not to do so.

• Fancy vacations are OK, but nothing is more exciting, adventurous or thrilling than a successful bountiful harvest.

• The needs of others always come first, whether it is feeding the livestock, protecting the family or looking after your neighbors.

• You work hard at doing the best job possible, but once you do all you can, you step back and let faith take over.

• Protect the quality of your handshake, your word and your reputation because they are the most important items a person can possess.

• Don’t forget to take time to relax and enjoy the company of others. Our lives are more enriched when shared with those we love.

My farming background continues to serve as the foundation I lean on professionally and personally.

I look forward to thanking all area farmers for what they contribute to our local economy.

Child joins Washburn athletics as honorary member

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Volleyball and basketball players at Washburn University can now call a 7-year-old girl their teammate.

The Topeka Capital-Journal reports Karis Selk is now an honorary member of Washburn University’s volleyball and women’s basketball teams. She’s also in her first year of remission from pediatric brain cancer.

Selk signed her name in pink pen during a letter-of-intent signing ceremony on Thursday, while the school’s head volleyball coach and head women’s basketball coach watched. She will get her own locker for each team and a jersey with a number of her choosing from both. Selk says she wants her number to be seven, because she’s 7 years old.

Selk also will be able to sit on the bench with the teams at games.

Hays High School teams fare well at High Plains ElectroRally

Photo courtesy Midwest Energy
Photo courtesy Midwest Energy

FHSU University Relations

In the race of experimental electric cars at the 15th annual High Plains ElectroRally, Hays High School won the Standard Class, Wheatland High School won the Solar Class, and Olathe Northwest won the team spirit award.

The ElectroRally is a “one-hour endurance race for electric cars” designed and constructed by high school students, said Joe Chretien, associate professor of applied technology at Fort Hays State University. The electric car that completes the most laps within the hour wins the race.

Cars average about 20 to 40 miles per hour, have an electric motor, up to 74 pounds of battery and at least 180 pounds of cargo, said Chretien.

Plaques are awarded to the top two finishers of the Standard Class cars, which meet the criteria for standard Electrathon America cars, and to the top two finishers of the Solar Class cars, which are similar to the standard cars but are powered by solar arrays. The team spirit plaque is awarded to the team that demonstrates collaborated effort.

Standard Class
Hays High School, 70 laps
Great Bend High School, 68 laps
Hays High School, 67 laps
Hays High School, 59 laps
Stockton High School, 58 laps
Wheatland High School, 54 laps
Olathe Northwest High School 34 laps
Hodgeman County, 14 laps
Hodgeman County, 14 laps

Solar Class
Wheatland High School, 61 laps
Scott City High School, 58 laps

Team Spirit Award
Olathe Northwest High School

“The course was in very good condition, even though we had some flooding rains earlier in the week,” said Chretien. “The City of Hays Parks Department did a fine job of maintaining and preparing it. The weather was sunny and cool to start out with, but ended up getting pretty warm and muggy. There was little wind which made for a great day for racing.”

The High Plains ElectroRally serves as a practice race for students to test their cars and get a feel for the racing environment before the Kansas ElectroRally Championship Series in the spring.

Schools register at no cost. The Institute of Applied Technology at Fort Hays State University, NCK Tech, Midwest Energy, Sunflower Electric Power Corp. and Western Electric Co-op sponsored the event.

The competition was held at Frontier Park in Hays on Sept. 25.

Media bias prevents civil discussion of education issues

Media bias favoring a tax-and-spend philosophy prevents civil discussion of serious education issues in Kansas, as evidenced by a Hays Daily News editorial entitled “School Efficiency.”  The editorial promotes a report published by the Kansas Center for Economic Growth as evidence that schools are underfunded and says the report should be “scrutinized closely” by citizens.   Kansas Policy Institute has closely scrutinized the report but it’s pretty obvious that the Hays Daily News has not.

Trabert Dave
Dave Trabert is president of the Kansas Policy Institute.

Close scrutiny of the report reveals that KCEG bases their conclusions on little more than opinion and false premise.  KCEG executive director Annie McKay says schools can’t be expected to perform “…without the resources they need” but their report simply assumes that more money is needed.  The truth is that no one knows how much schools need to meet the Supreme Court-mandated Rose standards while also making efficient use of taxpayer money.

KCEG merely says districts had less buying power in 2013 than in 2009, but it doesn’t require close scrutiny to know that, at $12,781 per-pupil, 2013 spending was well ahead of inflation since 2005.  Spending in 2009 was driven by court-ordered increases but we now know that the cost study presented to the courts was deliberately skewed to produce inflated numbers.  The Supreme Court no longer uses actual cost or Base State Aid to determine adequacy, a fact that KCEG and school districts refuse to accept.

School districts were also spending a lot more than necessary in 2009 (and since).  Every Legislative Post Audit study says districts could operate more efficiently, and some districts have told the on-going K-12 Student Achievement and Efficiency Commission that they know they are inefficient.  Districts haven’t even been spending all of the money given them by taxpayers, having used $430 million since 2005 to almost double their cash reserves.

Some of KCEG’s findings are based on a survey of school superintendents but the report does not disclose how many, and which, districts were asked to participate, how many actually responded, and the survey document and responses are not made available for review.  Several quotes critical of school finance are attributed to superintendents but KCEG unbelievably does not disclose their identities!

Some of their claims are sourced to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and former state budget director Duane Goossen, both of which Kansas Policy Institute has proven to  be guilty of making  spurious claims.  Other KCEG claims are merely based on “analysis of data.” KPI asked to see their “data” but predictably, KCEG declines to make it available (as do their allies at CBPP every time we’ve asked).

The Hays Daily News would rightfully crucify Kansas Policy Institute if we tried to perpetrate such a sham but KCEG gets away with it because the Daily News agrees with KCEG’s conclusions.  Knowing that media won’t question the work if they agree with the conclusions only encourages such bad behavior.

Enormous funding increases between 2005 and 2009 didn’t improve outcomes on independent assessments.  KSDE even admitted earlier this year that achievement gaps for low income students are actually getting worse, even though funding dedicated to help those students increased seven-fold since 2005.

These misleading declarations that schools are underfunded have nothing to do with education; rather, it’s all about money and politics for KCEG and their media enablers.

Moustakas’ HR in 11th puts Royals past Angels

By GREG BEACHAM
AP Sports Writer

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — When Mike Moustakas smacked a high fly into right field in the 11th inning, the Kansas City Royals’ No. 9 hitter had no idea whether it had enough juice to get out of the Big A.

“I knew I hit it pretty good, but that fence out there is pretty tall,” the Los Angeles born-and-bred slugger said.

Although this group of Royals only has two crazy games of playoff history, it’s becoming clear that good things happen to Kansas City in October.

The Royals went a few more extra innings, withstood a few more scares and figured out another dramatic way to win a playoff game — thanks to the local boy.

Moustakas homered leading off the 11th, and the Royals kept rolling in their first postseason in 29 years with a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Angels in their AL Division Series opener Thursday night.

Kansas City had managed just two baserunners since the fifth inning when Moustakas hit the first extra-inning homer in postseason history for the Royals, a high shot off Fernando Salas that barely reached the elevated right-field stands at Angel Stadium.

“It’s probably the biggest one I’ve ever hit so far,” said Moustakas, who had dozens of friends and family members in the Royals’ tiny cheering section. “It felt really amazing.”

Game 2 in the best-of-five series is Friday night at the Big A, with Angels 16-game winner Matt Shoemaker taking on fellow rookie Yordano Ventura.

Alcides Escobar had an early RBI double for the Royals, and their bullpen repeatedly escaped trouble in Kansas City’s first game since that spectacular, 12-inning comeback victory over Oakland in the wild-card playoff Tuesday night at Kauffman Stadium.

Chris Iannetta and David Freese homered early in the Angels’ first playoff game since 2009, but the majors’ most productive offense stranded eight runners in the five innings before Greg Holland’s perfect 11th.

“This is the type of game that we play,” Royals manager Ned Yost said. “We don’t score a bunch of runs … so we have a lot of confidence in our pitching.”

Winning pitcher Danny Duffy worked the 10th for Kansas City, and Holland picked up the save after arriving at the ballpark around the fourth inning. He went to North Carolina on the Royals’ off day to attend his child’s birth.

Mike Trout was 0 for 4 with a walk in his playoff debut. The favorite for AL MVP grounded into a fielder’s choice in the 10th before Albert Pujols popped out to end his 0-for-4 Angels playoff debut.

Josh Hamilton popped up to end the game, capping his 0-for-5 return to the lineup.

“We had some guys in scoring position, just couldn’t get that one hit, especially late,” Angels manager Mike Scioscia said. “Those guys hung in there and got the big outs and got the big hit late. So we hit two home runs to keep ourselves in the game, but outside of that, we didn’t really pressure those guys very much.”

Jered Weaver, Joe Smith and Huston Street combined to retire Kansas City’s final 15 batters before extra innings — and that’s when the Royals went to work. Kevin Jepsen let two runners on in the 10th, but retired Salvador Perez and Omar Infante to escape.

Salas wasn’t as lucky, giving up a homer to a third baseman who grew up in the San Fernando Valley before making his big league debut and hitting his first homer in Anaheim three years ago.

A raucous crowd banged balloons and cheered on the Angels throughout their postseason return after a half-decade away, but the fans got tense while the teams managed just three hits apiece in the first nine innings. Los Angeles earned home-field advantage throughout the postseason with a big league-best 98-64 record.

The Royals can’t match Los Angeles’ lineup on paper, but they’ve got some remarkable postseason mojo.

Even before Moustakas’ homer, Nori Aoki made dramatically awkward catches on the right-field warning track to end the sixth and seventh, twice making up for poor routes to the Angels’ drives with a last-instant stab. Lorenzo Cain also made two exceptional plays in center field in the first two innings, underlining Kansas City’s stellar defense.

“Lorenzo Cain is one of the best center fielders in baseball, and Aoki made some unbelievable plays,” Moustakas said. “We were able to cut their rallies down a little bit on some of the huge catches there in right field and center field, and hats off to those guys.”

Weaver yielded three hits over seven strong innings for the Angels while Jason Vargas, his good friend and Long Beach State teammate, pitched six innings of three-hit ball for Kansas City.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: RHP Kelvin Herrera walked Freese on five pitches leading off the seventh and then left the game with right forearm tightness. Herrera, a key member of Kansas City’s vaunted bullpen, will be re-evaluated Friday.

Angels: Hamilton played left field and batted seventh after missing 21 of the Angels’ final 22 regular-season games with upper-body injuries.

UP NEXT

Shoemaker (16-4, 3.04 ERA), the 28-year-old rookie who gets credit from Scioscia for saving the Angels’ season, makes his playoff debut. He hasn’t pitched since Sept. 15, when he strained an oblique muscle. Kansas City counters with Ventura (14-10, 3.20), who struggled in the sixth inning of the wild-card game, but possesses a 100 mph fastball.

Aging agencies under scrutiny after health care compact article

anis DeBoer, executive director of the Kansas Area Agencies on Aging Association.
Janis DeBoer, executive director of the Kansas Area Agencies on Aging Association.

By Andy Marso
KHI News Service

TOPEKA — A series of 11 agencies that serve older Kansans are under scrutiny after one in Johnson County published an article in its monthly newsletter critical of a health care compact the Legislature passed last session.

Janis DeBoer, executive director of the Kansas Area Agencies on Aging Association, said she received a call from a member of the Kansas Legislative Research Department who was researching the aging agencies at a legislator’s request.

DeBoer said the researcher asked her how many people the agencies serve.

“They asked if we generated an annual report with that information,” DeBoer said. “I said, ‘No, we do not, and probably the best source of that information is the KDADS (Kansas Department on Aging and Disability Services) repositories.’”

DeBoer said that was the only question in her brief conversation with the legislative research employee.

The legislative research department is a state agency of nonpartisan experts who provide information to legislators. It is the department’s policy not to reveal the legislator who requested specific information or details of the request.

DeBoer said that in the three years she has been executive director, researchers may have called “a couple” times, but she could not recall what the previous information requests were about.

“Not very frequently do we get phone calls from the legislative research department,” DeBoer said. “Every once in a while.”

The latest request for information came within a week of a tense meeting between Johnson County legislators and members of the Johnson County Commission on Aging, a group of senior volunteers who advise that county’s Area Agency on Aging.
The legislators took umbrage with the commission’s intent to publish in a county newsletter, The Best Times, an article critical of a health care compact they approved last session. The compact, which includes nine states, proposes that member states be allowed to opt out of federal health care laws and receive money for programs like Medicaid and Medicare in block grants.

Supporters of the legislation in Kansas saw it as a repudiation of President Barack Obama, but a majority of the Johnson County Commission on Aging members saw it as a threat to Medicare.

During the Sept. 15 meeting, several legislators expressed concern about proximity of the article’s publication to the November election, with Sen. Jeff Melcher, a Republican from Leawood, calling it “partisan” and an “October surprise.”

At one point House Speaker Ray Merrick, a Republican from Stilwell, turned to Dan Goodman, the director of the Johnson County Area Agency on Aging, and told Goodman, “This is going to set you guys back.”

Sen. Jim Denning, a Republican from Overland Park, told the commission members they “really need to think about this” because publishing the article would anger most of the Johnson County legislative delegation.

The next day Johnson County Commissioner Jason Osterhaus emailed a county official saying he needed help fulfilling an information request from Denning’s wife, Marearl, who had asked about the budget for the agency on aging, the budget for the The Best Times, the breakdown of local versus federal funding for the Best Times and who at the county oversees the publication.

Denning, in an email Wednesday, said he was not involved in his wife’s request, adding that if he wanted that information he would have found it online or asked the county manager directly.

“Marearl is an activist and does her own thing,” Denning said.

Rep. Stephanie Clayton, a Republican from Overland Park who is the legislative appointee to the Johnson County Commission on Aging, said she encourages citizens and legislators alike to seek information about public agencies. But the pending requests surrounding the aging agencies is worth monitoring, she said, because of the “disrespectful and menacing” tone some of her colleagues took in the Sept. 15 meeting.

Johnson County commissioners ultimately granted a page in The Best Times to legislators so they could rebut the commission’s stance on the health care compact.

Clayton, who voted against the compact, said the commission on aging was within its rights to publish the initial article and the legislators who disagreed with them on the issue overreacted.

“I see no reason for the reaction it generated from my colleagues in the Legislature,” Clayton said. “I don’t know why they’re so upset, but they clearly are.”

TMP girls’ golf 2nd in Clay Center

The TMP-Marian girls’ golf team finished second, two strokes back of Salina Center, at the Clay Center Invitation on Thursday.

Taylor Dinkel was second overall with a 49. Allison Helget shot a 50 to finish third and Karee Dinkel was fourth with a round of 51.

Salina Central combined for a 204 to win the tournament, TMP-Marian was second with a 206.

Regulations become ‘pressing issue’ in stormwater management

Hays Stormwater Specialist Steven Walters
Hays Stormwater Specialist Steven Walters

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

When the city of Hays implemented a new Stormwater Utility fee in July 2011, flood control was anticipated as the biggest concern.

Since then, according to City Manager Toby Dougherty, “aging infrastructure has become a bigger problem, and now, (state and federal) regulatory requirements are a pressing issue.”

During Thursday’s Hays City Commission work session, new Stormwater Specialist Steven Walters reviewed stormwater activities in Hays.

Walters explained the city’s new stormwater permit, issued in February, requires further reduction of “impairments” or contaminants in the city’s Big Creek watershed.

“We as a municipality are supposed to reduce the levels of these impairments to the ‘maximum extent practical’, and we may see that change to actual numbers required for the next permit,” Walters said. “We don’t know what will happen:”

Hays collects water samples in five locations — only three are required — four times a year following “significant rainfall events of more than one-half inch.” The contaminants monitored are E. coli, nitrogen, phosphorus, orthophosphate and total suspended solids.

Collections of stormwater runoff Sept. 5 show E. coli contamination is very high in the Big Creek Oxbow on the Fort Hays State University campus.  The Sept. 5, E. coli MPN (Most Probable Number) was measured at 199,000. Recreational Use Water Exposure Limits is 126 MPN.

Commissioner Shaun Musil asked how that compares with other similarly sized Kansas cities.

“There hasn’t been a whole lot of data collected,” Walters replied. “That’s what this permit kind of does, is gather information to establish a ‘baseline’ number for the state so they know where they want to go with regulations.”

“The biggest E. Coli contributor there is dogs and cats — pet waste,” according to Walters, “and it’s made worse by limited sunlight penetrating the stagnant water which will kill the bacteria.”

Commissioner Eber Phelps pointed out the FHSU campus area is home to a “hundreds of feral cats” and “pet owners often walk their dogs along the Big Creek dike.”

“We have to try and do our best to control these contaminants coming off our watershed and flowing into Big Creek,” Walters added. “It’s a challenge and will require some city expenditures.”

Stormwater runoff is regulated by the Kansas Department of Health and Environment through the federal Clean Water Act of the Environmental Protection Agency.

In other business, commissioners agreed to move a bid recommendation for storm sewer structure repair to the Oct. 28 meeting. Commissioners, the city manager and city attorney met in a 15-minute special session at the end of Thursday’s meeting. No action was taken.

The Oct. 9 Hays city commission meeting has been canceled due to a lack of quorum.

GM issues 2 more recalls for SUVs, mini cars

Screen-Shot-2014-10-02-at-8.19.14-PM.pngDETROIT (AP) — General Motors announced two more recalls, pushing its total for the year to more than 70, affecting almost 30 million vehicles in North America.

The biggest of Friday’s recalls covers just over 290,000 Cadillac SRX and Saab 9-4X SUVs in the U.S. The company says some rear suspension nuts may not have been tightened properly. That could cause the toe link adjuster to separate from the suspension, possibly causing a crash.

The recall affects SRXs from the 2011 through 2015 model years and Saabs from the 2011 and 2012 model years. GM says the problem has caused three crashes and two injuries.

The other recall covers over 89,000 Chevrolet Spark mini-cars from 2013 through 2015. Rust can cause a hood latch to stick, and the hood can open unexpectedly.

Hays Public Library will offer parents (another) night off

Library - Hays 001

Hays Public Library

When was the last time you went out without the kids? If you had to think about it, it’s been too long.

The Hays Public Library is offering a Parents’ Night Out on Friday, Oct. 10. Parents can drop off their kids for a fun time at the library while parents can enjoy the night off. The program is free.

The success of the September Parents’ Night Out has prompted the HPL to offer it as a monthly program. Future dates are have yet to be determined, but check www.hayspublib.org for updates.

Parents must register their children with the Children’s Department prior to Oct. 10. Drop off is at 6 p.m., and all children must be picked up by 10 p.m. Children will enjoy games, movies and snacks while you enjoy the night off.

Children must be potty trained to attend program. Children should also eat dinner prior to being dropped off. Only a snack will be served.

To register, call the Children’s Department at (785) 625-5916. For more information, stop by the library at 1205 Main.

Kansas bitcoin operator allowed to resume some business

Federal Trade Commission  FTCLEAWOOD, Kan. (AP) — A Kansas bitcoin company that was shut down after being sued by the federal government will be allowed to resume some of its business.

A federal judge on Thursday allowed Leawood-based Butterfly Labs Inc. to reopen for limited operations. A federal receiver was given temporary control of the company on Sept. 18.

The Federal Trade Commission alleges the company defrauded thousands of customers out of between $20 million and $50 million by not delivering working equipment to allow them to receive bitcoins. Butterfly has denied all the allegations.

The Kansas City Star reports that Butterfly officials said the judge’s order is a “step in the right direction” but it will continue to address what it called several inaccuracies that have been made against the company.

FHSU men’s soccer wins third straight, shuts out West Texas A&M

The 25th-ranked Fort Hays State Men’s Soccer team pushed its win streak to three games with a 1-0 victory over West Texas A&M on Thursday (Oct. 2).  The non-conference matchup in Canyon, Texas gave FHSU a regional shutout win on its record.
 
Scoreless through the first half, Fort Hays State broke the tie near the midway point of the second period on Tanner Brock’s first goal of the year. At 67:32, Michael Cole fired a cross to Brock from the left wing, who beat the keeper for an open net goal.
 
Fort Hays State nearly pushed the score to 2-0 with around 15 minutes to play in regulation, as Maurizio Costa and Diego Cabral fired shots on goal within a minute of each other, but two saves from Patrick Satorie kept the lead at one.
 
Brock and Cabral led the team with three shots (and two shots on goal), while Austin Clifton added two shots, both of which were on goal. Cole’s assist was his third of the year, pushing him to a team-leading 11 points on the season.

Jason Babyak picked up his first shutout of the year, playing all 90 minutes with four saves (all of which came in the first half.
 
FHSU returns home this Saturday (Oct. 4) to face Harding at 1 p.m.  West Texas A&M travels to Hays, Kan., for a rematch on Nov. 2 in the Tigers’ regular season finale.

HHS volleybal goes 3-0 at own quad

The Hays High volleyball team goes 3-0 at the own quadrangular Thursday. The Indians sweep Salina South (27-25, 26-24), Abilene (25-20, 25-19) and Norton (25-14, 25-13).

Against South, Taylor Groen Younger had 12 assists. Albany Schaffer led the way with 16 digs. Ashlyn Parrish and Tessa Stickel each recorded seven kills.  Ashlyn Parrish had 5 blocks.

In the Abilene match, Tessa Stickel, Kylie Brown and Ashlyn Parrish all had seven kills. Madison Prough had 10 assists. Kylie Brown had 5 blocks and Albany Schaffer had 10 digs.

Tessa Stickel led the way in the Norton match with six kills. Madison Prough recorded 13 assists and Albany Schaffer had 10 digs.

Hays High is now 16-5. They at at the Great Bend tournament Saturday.

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